Out This Week: September 1, 2014

With so many new games and movies coming out, it can be hard to keep up. Lucky for you, IGN is here to help with a weekly round-up of the biggest releases each and every week. Check out the latest releases for this week, and be sure to come back next Monday for a new update.

Note:The prices and deals compiled below are accurate at the time we published this story, but all are subject to change.

From our Preview: I'll be honest, and admit I've spent a ton of time messing with Create-A-Sim in The Sims 3, trying to get my Sims looking just as I hoped. It's not exactly easy to create everyone in your life in The Sims 3 though, as it simply doesn't let you customize certain details. But now that The Sims 4 Create-A-Sim is here, those days are long gone.

From the Release Date Announcement: Warriors Orochi 3 released in 2012, combining the Dynasty Warriors and Samurai Warriors series – it also included characters from franchises such as Ninja Gaiden, Soul Calibur and Dead or Alive. Warriors Orochi 3 Ultimate will release with improved visuals, a new storyline and new modes for Xbox One, PS4, PS3 and PS Vita. Omega Games' enhanced version includes 145 playable characters that can be used in several game modes, such as One Warrior Against a Thousand, offline and online competitions, and a hybrid mode composed of team and card battles.

From our Review of the PS4 Version: Make your own fun. This was once the mantra of the creative kid in the boring backyard; now it’s a pitch well-suited for Warframe. There’s nothing openly exciting about where its repetitive mission designs take you, but the huge variety of weapons, powers, and combat suits lets your creativity open up the battlefield to fun experimentation — that is, if you’re willing to pay.

Bringing Harmonix’s Kinect-enabled dance party franchise to the Xbox One, Dance Central Spotlight gives players to design their own playlist from a library of downloadable dance tracks. Songs feature multiple step tracks for a variety of ways to play and multiple challenge levels.

From our Review of the PS4 Version: Don't Starve drives me mad like few games ever do. It provided me with dozens of exhilarating brushes with death, but padded those unforgettable moments with long stretches of tedious busy work. It's the type of game where you can spend hours mining the environment, outfitting your character, and fortifying your home base, only to have your slice of paradise shattered by a terrifying, nearly-unstoppable shadow beast invasion. It's a roguelike at heart, meaning that death is inevitable, and once you die, it's truly game over.

Don't Starve will never, ever hold your hand, and I both love it and hate it for that.

Jabberwock Island – once a popular tourist destination, this now uninhabited island remains oddly pristine. You and your classmates at the elite Hope's Peak Academy have been brought to this island by your super-cute teacher for a “lovey-dovey, heart-throbbing school trip.” Everyone seems to be having fun in the sun...until Monokuma returns to restart his murderous game! Trapped on this island of mutual killing, your only hope of escape rests in solving the island’s mysteries. But be warned—sometimes the truth can be its own despair...

As in the first game, players will take on the role of a high school student as they are thrust into a life-or-death situation, and must use their wits and teamwork to survive.

Exit Theatre Mode

Be sure to check back at the beginning of every week for a round-up of the week's hottest game and movie releases.